In AP Human Geography, nationalist movements are political movements that prioritize a nation's sovereignty and independence, often demanding self-rule for a national group and resisting external governance like supranational organizations, making them a major challenge to state sovereignty in Topic 4.9.
A nationalist movement is a political push by people who identify as a nation (a group sharing culture, language, history, or identity) to control their own political destiny. That can mean demanding full independence, fighting for autonomy within an existing state, or resisting power that sits above the state, like the EU or other supranational organizations.
Here's the geography angle the CED cares about. Nationalist movements pull in two directions at once. Inside multinational states, they act as a centrifugal force that fragments the country, which is exactly what devolution looks like in Spain, Belgium, Canada, and Nigeria (EK SPS-4.B.1). And against supranationalism, they push back on trade agreements, military alliances, and global governance that ask states to give up some sovereignty (EK SPS-4.B.3, SPS-4.B.4). Think of nationalist movements as the 'we govern ourselves' counterweight to both bigger unions above the state and forced unity within it. Brexit-style resistance to the EU and Catalonia's independence drive are the same impulse pointed at different targets.
Nationalist movements live in Topic 4.9, Challenges to Sovereignty (Unit 4: Political Patterns and Processes) and directly support learning objective AP Human Geography 4.9.A, which asks you to explain how political, economic, cultural, and technological changes challenge state sovereignty. They're your go-to example for the political and cultural side of that objective. When a national group inside a state demands autonomy or independence, the state's sovereignty over its territory weakens, and you get devolution or even disintegration (think the former Soviet Union and Sudan splitting apart, per EK SPS-4.B.1). The CED also notes that communication technology has accelerated these movements (EK SPS-4.B.2), so nationalist organizing online is fair game on the exam. If you can explain why the same world produces both the EU and Catalan separatism, you understand 4.9.
Keep studying AP® Human Geography Unit 4
Ethnonationalist Movements (Unit 4)
Ethnonationalist movements are the most common flavor of nationalist movement, where the 'nation' is defined by ethnicity. Catalonia and the Basque Country are ethnonationalist because language and ethnic identity drive the demand for autonomy. Every ethnonationalist movement is nationalist, but a movement can be nationalist without being ethnic-based.
Devolution of States (Unit 4)
Nationalist movements are often the engine and devolution is the result. When Spain grants Catalonia autonomy or the Soviet Union breaks into independent republics, that's devolution caused by nationalist pressure. On an FRQ, pair them: the movement is the cause, devolution is the spatial outcome.
ASEAN and Supranationalism (Unit 4)
Supranational organizations like ASEAN ask states to pool sovereignty for trade and security benefits. Nationalist movements push the opposite way, arguing sovereignty shouldn't be shared at all. The exam loves this tension because it shows sovereignty being squeezed from above (supranationalism) and below (devolution) at the same time.
Centrifugal Forces and the Cold War (Units 3-4)
Nationalist movements are a classic centrifugal force, pulling a state apart along cultural lines. The end of the Cold War is the textbook case: once Soviet control loosened, nationalist movements in places like Ukraine and the Baltic states turned one state into fifteen.
Expect nationalist movements in multiple-choice stems built around maps or scenarios. A typical question shows a map of Spain highlighting Catalonia and the Basque Country, regions with distinct languages and autonomy claims, and asks which challenge to state sovereignty it illustrates. The answer connects nationalist identity to devolution. Your job is to do three things: identify the movement from a map or description, explain the process it triggers (devolution, fragmentation, or resistance to supranationalism), and name the underlying cause (cultural, political, economic, or technological change, per 4.9.A). No released FRQ has used the phrase verbatim, but FRQs regularly ask you to explain devolutionary pressures or compare devolution with supranationalism, and nationalist movements are the example bank you pull from. Don't just say 'Catalonia wants independence.' Say why (distinct language and identity) and what it does to Spain's sovereignty.
Nationalist movements is the umbrella term for any movement seeking sovereignty or self-rule for a nation. Ethnonationalist movements are the subset where the nation is defined specifically by ethnicity, like the Basques in Spain. Civic nationalism, by contrast, can rally around shared political identity rather than ethnic identity (resistance to EU authority is nationalist but not necessarily ethnic). On the exam, if the stem mentions a distinct language, ethnicity, or culture driving the autonomy claim, ethnonationalist is the more precise answer.
Nationalist movements are political movements demanding sovereignty and self-rule for a national group, and they challenge state sovereignty from within.
They are a primary cause of devolution, which the CED illustrates with Spain, Belgium, Canada, and Nigeria, and of full state disintegration in Sudan and the former Soviet Union.
Nationalist movements also resist supranationalism, opposing the transfer of sovereignty to organizations built for trade agreements, military alliances, and transnational challenges.
Advances in communication technology have made it easier for nationalist movements to organize, which is why the CED links technology to both devolution and democratization.
On the exam, identify the movement from a map or scenario, then explain the sovereignty outcome: autonomy, devolution, or independence.
They're political movements that seek sovereignty and self-governance for a nation, either by breaking away from an existing state or by resisting supranational control. They're tested in Topic 4.9 as a challenge to state sovereignty under learning objective AP Human Geography 4.9.A.
Not exactly. Ethnonationalist movements are a subset of nationalist movements where ethnicity defines the nation, like the Basque movement in Spain. A nationalist movement can also be built on civic or political identity rather than ethnicity.
No. Most result in something short of independence, like autonomous regions (Catalonia within Spain) or greater regional powers (devolution in Belgium and Canada). Full disintegration, like the Soviet Union splitting into independent states or Sudan dividing, is the extreme outcome.
From below, they fragment states into autonomous regions or new countries (devolution). From above, they push back against supranational organizations that require states to share sovereignty, like resistance to EU authority. Both directions weaken the state's exclusive control over its territory.
Catalonia and the Basque Country in Spain are the most exam-tested examples, since they have distinct languages and active autonomy claims. The CED also points to Belgium, Canada, and Nigeria for devolution, and Sudan and the former Soviet Union for full state disintegration.
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